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SEG4110 – Advanced Software Design and Reengineering

SEG4110 – Advanced Software Design and Reengineering. TOPIC J C++ Standard Template Library. Standard Template Library (STL). The Standard Template Library defines powerful, template-based, reusable components That implements common data structures and algorithms

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SEG4110 – Advanced Software Design and Reengineering

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  1. SEG4110 – Advanced Software Design and Reengineering TOPIC J C++ Standard Template Library

  2. Standard Template Library (STL) • The Standard Template Library defines powerful, template-based, reusable components • That implements common data structures and algorithms • STL extensively uses generic programming based on templates • Divided into three components: • Containers: data structures that store objects of any type • Iterators: used to manipulate container elements • Algorithms: searching, sorting and many others SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  3. Containers • Three types of containers • Sequence containers: • linear data structures such as vectors and linked lists • Associative containers: • non-linear containers such as hash tables • Container adapters: • constrained sequence containers such as stacks and queues • Sequence and associative containers are also called first-class containers SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  4. Iterators • Iterators are pointers to elements of first-class containers Type const_iterator defines an iterator to a container element that cannot be modified Type iterator defines an iterator to a container element that can be modified • All first-class containers provide the members functions begin() and end() return iterators pointing to the first and last element of the container SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  5. Iterators (cont.) • If the iterator it points to a particular element, then • it++ (or ++it) points to the next element and • *it refers to the value of the element pointed to by it • The iterator resulting from end() can only be used to detect whether the iterator has reached the end of the container • We will see how to use begin() and end() in the next slides SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  6. Sequence Containers • STL provides three sequence containers • vector: based on arrays • deque (double-ended queue): based on arrays • list: based on linked lists SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  7. Sequence Containers: vector • The implementation of a vector is based on arrays • Vectors allow direct access to any element via indexes • Insertion at the end is normally efficient. • The vector simply grows • Insertion and deletion in the middle is expensive • An entire portion of the vector needs to be moved SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  8. Sequence Containers: vector (cont.) • When the vector capacity is reached then • A larger vector is allocated, • The elements of the previous vector are copied and • The old vector is deallocated • To use vectors, we need to include the header <vector> • Some functions of the class vector include • size, capacity, insert… SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  9. Example of using the class vector // display the content of v vector<int>::const_iterator it; for (it = v.begin(); it != v.end(); it++) { cout << *it << ‘\n’; } return 0; } • #include <iostream> • #include <vector> //vector class-template • using std; • int main() • { • vector<int> v; • // add integers at the end of the vector • v.push_back( 2 ); • v.push_back( 3 ); • v.push_back( 4 ); • cout << "\nThe size of v is: " << v.size() • << "\nThe capacity of v is: " • << v.capacity(); SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  10. Sequence Containers: list • list is implemented using a doubly-linked list • Insertions and deletions are very efficient at any point of the list • But you have to have access to an element in the middle of the list first • bidirectional iterators are used to traverse the container in both directions • Include header <list> when using lists • Some functions of the class list • push_front, pop_front, remove, unique, merge, reverse and sort SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  11. Sequence Containers: deque • deque stands for double-ended queue • deque combines the benefits of vector and list • It provides indexed access using indexes (which is not possible using lists) • It also provides efficient insertion and deletion in the front (which is not efficient using vectors) and the end SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  12. deque (cont.) • Additional storage for a deque is allocated using blocks of memory • that are maintained as an array of pointers to those blocks • Same basic functions as vector, in addition to that • deque supports push_front and pop_front for insertion and deletion at beginning of deque SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  13. Associative Containers • Associative containers use keys to store and retrieve elements • There are four types: multiset, set, multimap and map • all associative containers maintain keys in sorted order • all associative containers support bidirectional iterators • set does not allow duplicate keys • multiset and multimap allow duplicate keys • multimap and map allow keys and values to be mapped SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  14. Associative Containers: multiset • Multisets are implemented using a red-black binary search tree for fast storage and retrieval of keys • Multisets allow duplicate keys • The ordering of the keys is determined by the STL comparator function object less<T> • Keys sorted with less<T> must support comparison using the < operator SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  15. Example of using a multiset • #include <iostream> • #include <set> • using std; • int main() • { • multiset< int, less< int > > ms; • ms.insert( 10 ); // insert 10 • ms.insert( 35 ); // insert 35 • ms.insert( 10 ); // insert 10 again (allowed) • cout << “There are " << ms.count( 10 ); // returns the number of entries = 10 • multiset < int, less< int > >::iterator it; // creates an iterator • it = ms.find(10); • if ( it != ms.end() ) // iterator not at end • cout << “\n10 was found"; • return 0; • } SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  16. Associative Containers: set • Sets are identical to multisets except that they do not allow duplicate keys • To use sets, we need to include the header file <set> SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  17. Associative Containers: multimap • Multimaps associate keys to values • They are implemented using red-black binary search trees for fast storage and retrieval of keys and values • Insertion is done using objects of the class pair (with a key and value) • Multimaps allow duplicate keys (many values can map to a single key) • The ordering of the keys is determined by the STL comparator function object less<T> SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  18. Example of using a multimap • #include <iostream> • #include <map> • using std; • typedefmultimap< int, double, std::less< int > > mp_type; // creates a mutlimap type • int main() • { mp_typemp; // value_type is overloaded in multimap to create objects of the class pair mp.insert( mp_type::value_type( 10, 14.5 ) ); mp.insert( mp_type::value_type( 10, 18.5 ) ); //allowed cout << "There are " << mp.count( 15 ) << "\n"; // use iterator to go through mp for (mp_type::iterator it = mp.begin(); it != mp.end(); it ++) • cout << it->first << '\t' << it->second << '\n'; • return 0; • } SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  19. Associative Containers: map • They are implemented using red-black binary search trees just like multimaps • Unlike multimaps, they allow storage and retrieval of unique key/value pairs. They do not allow duplicates of keys • The class map overloads the [ ] operator to access values in a flexible way SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  20. Example of using a map • The following code fragment shows how to use indexes with an object of the class map • map<int, double, less<int>> map_obj; • // sets the value of key 20 to 125.25. If subscript • // 20 is not in map then creates new • // key=20, value=125.25 pair • map_obj [20] = 125.25; SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  21. Container Adapters • STL supports three container adapters: • stack, queue and priority_queue • They are implemented using the containers seen before • They do not provide actual data structure • Container adapters do not support iterators • The functions push and pop are common to all container adapters SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  22. Container Adapters:stack • Last-in-first-out data structure • They are implemented with vector, list, and deque (by default) • Header file<stack> • Example of creating stacks • A stack of int using a vector: stack < int, vector < int > > s1; • A stack of int using a list: stack < int, list < int > > s2; • A stack of int using a deque: stack < int > s3; SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  23. Container Adapters:queue • First-in-first-out data structure • Implemented with list and deque(by default) • Header file <queue> • Example: • A queue of int using a list: queue <int, list<int>> q1; • A queue of int using a deque: queue <int> q2; SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  24. Container Adapters:priority_queue • Insertions are done in a sorted order • Deletions from front similar to a queue • They are implemented with vector (by default) or deque • The elements with the highest priority are removed first • less<T> is used by default for comparing elements • Header file <queue> SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  25. Algorithms • STL separates containers and algorithms • The main benefit is to avoid virtual function calls • This cannot be done in Java or C# because they do not have such flexible mechanisms for dealing with function objects • Smalltalk does … all the following can be easily implemented in Smalltalk • The subsequent slides describe most common STL algorithms SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  26. Fill and Generate • fill(iterator1, iterator2, value); • fills the values of the elements between iterator1 and iterator2 with value • fill_n(iterator1, n, value); • changes specified number of elements starting at iterator1 to value • generate(iterator1, iterator2, function); • similar to fill except that it calls afunction to return value • generate_n(iterator1, n, function) • same as fill_n except that it calls a functionto return value SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  27. Comparing sequences of values • bool equal(iterator1, iterator2, iterator3); • compares sequence from iterator1 to iterator2 with the sequence beginning at iterator3 • return true is they are equal, false otherwise • pair mismatch(iterator1, iterator2, iterator3); • compares sequence from iterator1 to iterator2 with the sequence starting at iterator3 • returns a pair object with iterators pointing to where mismatch occurred • example of the a pair object pair <<vector>::iterator, <vector>::iterator> par_obj; SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  28. Removing elements from containers • iterator remove(iterator1, iterator2, value); • removes all instances of value in a range iterator1 to iterator2 • does not physically remove the elements from the sequence • moves the elements that are not removed forward • returns an iterator that points to the "new" end of container • iterator remove_copy(iterator1, iterator2, iterator3, value); • copies elements of the range iterator1-iterator2 that are not equal to value into the sequence starting at iterator3 • returns an iterator that points to the last element of the sequence starting at iterator3 SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  29. Replacing elements (1) • replace( iterator1, iterator2, value, newvalue ); • replaces value with newvalue for the elements located in the range iterator1 to iterator2 • replace_if( iterator1, iterator2, function, newvalue ); • replaces all elements in the range iterator1-iterator2 for which function returns true with newvalue SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  30. Replacing elements (2) • replace_copy( iterator1, iterator2, iterator3, value, newvalue ); replaces and copies elements of the range iterator1-iterator2 to iterator3 • replace_copy_if( iterator1, iterator2, iterator3, function, newvalue ); replaces and copies elements for which function returns true where iterator3 SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  31. Search algorithms • iterator find(iterator1, iterator2, value) • returns an iterator that points to first occurrence of value • iterator find_if(iterator1, iterator2, function) • returns an iterator that points to the first element for which function returns true. SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  32. Sorting algorithms • sort(iterator1, iterator2) • sorts elements in ascending order • binary_search(iterator1, iterator2, value) • searches in an ascending sorted list for value using a binary search SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  33. Copy and Merge • copy(iterator1, iterator2, iterator3) copies the range of elements from iterator1 to iterator2 into iterator3 • copy_backward(iterator1, iterator2, iterator3) copies in reverse order the range of elements from iterator1 to iterator2 into iterator3 • merge(iter1, iter2, iter3, iter4, iter5) • ranges iter1-iter2 and iter3-iter4 must be sorted in ascending order and copies both lists into iter5 in ascending order SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  34. Unique and Reverse order • iterator unique(iterator1, iterator2) • removes (logically) duplicate elements from a sorted list • returns iterator to the new end of sequence • reverse(iterator1, iterator2) • reverses elements in the range of iterator1 to iterator2 SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  35. Utility algorithms (1) • random_shuffle(iterator1, iterator2) • randomly mixes elements in the range iterator1-iterator2 • int count(iterator1, iterator2, value) • returns number of instances of value in the range • int count_if(iterator1, iterator2, function) • counts number of instances for which function returns true SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  36. Utility algorithms (2) • iterator min_element(iterator1, iterator2) • returns iterator to smallest element • iterator max_element(iterator1, iterator2) • returns iterator to largest element • accumulate(iterator1, iterator2) • returns the sum of the elements in the range SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  37. Utility algorithms (3) • for_each(iterator1, iterator2, function) • calls function on every element in range • transform(iterator1, iterator2, iterator3, function) • calls function for all elements in range iterator1-iterator2, and copies result to iterator3 SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  38. Algorithms on sets (1) • includes(iter1, iter2, iter3, iter4) • returns true if iter1-iter2 contains iter3-iter4. Both sequences must be sorted • set_difference(iter1, iter2, iter3, iter4,iter5) • copies elements in range iter1-iter2 that do not exist in second range iter3-iter4 into iter5 • set_intersection(iter1, iter2, iter3, iter4, iter5) • copies common elements from the two ranges iter1-iter2 and iter3-iter4 into iter5 SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  39. Algorithms on sets (2) • set_symmetric_difference(iter1, iter2, iter3, iter4, iter5) • copies elements in range iter1-iter2 that are not in range iter3-iter4 and vice versa, into iter5. Both sets must be sorted • set_union(iter1, iter2, iter3, iter4, iter5) • copies elements in both ranges to iter5. Both sets must be sorted SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

  40. References • "C++, How to program", Harvey M. Deitel, Paul J. Deitel , 4th edition, Prentice Hall • "The C++ Programming Language", Bjarne Stroustrup, 3rd Edition, Addison-Wesley SEG4110 - Topic J - C++ Standard Template Library

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